China Daily (Hong Kong)

Spike in UK toll heightens supply fears

Rising deaths coincide with medics’ calls for gear, but Italy trend down

- Jonathan Powell and Earle Gale in London, Xinhua and agencies contribute­d to this story.

Britons have been jolted by the biggest rise in deaths in a single day due to the novel coronaviru­s, as doctors cried out for more protective gear on Tuesday and Prime Minister Boris Johnson spent another night in intensive care for persistent COVID-19 symptoms.

Deaths in the country reached 6,159 on Tuesday, with 786 fatalities added from the previous day — the largest such rise in a day. The virus has infected more than 55,000, health authoritie­s said.

Johnson on Tuesday spent a second night in intensive care and was in a stable condition after receiving oxygen support for COVID-19 complicati­ons while his foreign minister directs the country’s battle against the outbreak.

Johnson, 55, who tested positive for the coronaviru­s nearly two weeks ago, was admitted to hospital on Sunday evening as he had a persistent high temperatur­e and cough but his condition deteriorat­ed on Monday and he was rushed into an intensive care unit.

His designated deputy, Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab, said Johnson would soon be back at the helm as the world faces one of the gravest public health crises in a century.

“The prime minister is in a stable condition, he’s comfortabl­e and in good spirits,” Edward Argar, a junior health minister, said on Wednesday. “He has in the past had some oxygen but he’s not on ventilatio­n.”

London Mayor Sadiq Khan said on Wednesday that the United Kingdom is nowhere near lifting its lockdown measures as the peak is still more than a week away.

UK doctors continue to voice serious concerns about a lack of personal protective equipment, with some calling the current provision “useless”, the British Medical Associatio­n has warned.

In a BMA survey of almost 2,000 health workers, more than twothirds of doctors — 69 percent — said they did not feel protected.

The virus is raging across Europe, which has reported 634,735 infections and 55,826 deaths as of Wednesday, according to the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control.

Italy, the most affected country in Europe, registered 135,586 confirmed cases as of Tuesday, including 17,127 deaths. Civil Protection Department Chief Angelo Borrelli stressed on Tuesday that “the decrease in the trend of new infections is being confirmed”.

He also confirmed that the pressure on Italian hospitals was lessening, and especially “for

These nurses and doctors, who left their homes to help their colleagues in other member states are the true faces of European solidarity.” Ursula von der Leyen, president of the European Commission

intensive care units, where we have now 106 fewer patients (compared to the previous day)”.

Borrelli also praised the nation’s health workers for their non-stop contributi­ons. “My thoughts are with medical profession­als ... who are doing their best to protect all of us,” he said.

A team of doctors and nurses from Romania and Norway is being dispatched to Milan and Bergamo, the European Union said on Tuesday in a statement. Austria has offered over 3,000 liters of disinfecta­nt to Italy.

“These nurses and doctors, who left their homes to help their colleagues in other member states are the true faces of European solidarity,” European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said.

On Monday, Italy received a delivery of personal protective equipment from China. The commission said a Chinese plane delivered 2 million surgical masks, 200,000 N95 masks and 50,000 testing kits to the country.

Too early to lift lockdown

Paris on Tuesday banned daytime jogging to keep people from bending anti-coronaviru­s lockdown rules as top health official Jerome Salomon said that 10,328 people had died of COVID-19 in France since March 1.

Of these, 7,091 had perished in hospitals, including 597 new deaths, and 3,237 in aged-care homes, he said, warning “the epidemic is continuing its progressio­n”.

Senior government officials warned it was too early to think of lifting the nationwide lockdown — which came into force on March 17 and is set to run until April 15.

Interior Minister Christophe Castaner urged municipal officials to toughen restrictio­ns on movement if necessary, and Paris announced a ban on outdoor sports by individual­s between 10 am and 7 pm, from Wednesday.

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